Posted on August 25, 2014
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| An opera performed on Aug. 25 was so nationalistic, the audience emerged from the opera house and promptly joined in the rioting! |
Sometimes what happens is rioting and looting.
Sometimes what happens is political revolution.
Sometimes it's rioting that leads to revolution!
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| King William I |
That is what happened in Belgium on this date in 1830. King William I of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands spoke a different language and professed a different religion than most of the people in southern Belgium, and unemployment was high. When riots broke out in Brussels on August 25, 1830, shops were looted, factories were occupied, and machinery was destroyed. William sent soldiers to restore order, but rioting and uprisings continued elsewhere in the country and broke out again and again in Brussels.
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| Perhaps this political cartoon, showing the kings of other nations sending Leopold I to Belgium to become its king, helps us understand why many Belgians resented the London Conference. |
Some people were very happy about the conference. I'm not talking about the Belgians here (although I assume that some of them were happy with the results), because many Belgians who were pro-independence felt rather humiliated that the leaders of other nations would presume to say whether or not they were allowed to be independent. But some Europeans were excited that the leading powers could use talk – diplomacy – rather than force – war – to decide things, and they saw the conference as providing “the institutional framework through which the leading powers of the time safeguarded the peace of Europe.”
However, the peace was not necessarily safeguarded. William I, feeling even more humiliated by the conference's decision, launched in 1831 a military attack to reconquer Belgium. Called “The Ten Days' Campaign,” the attack was not successful. France backed the Belgians, William I's forces were turned back, and in 1839 the Dutch finally accepted Belgium's independence.
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